<em>Alice and the Mad Hatter's Tea Party</em>, Illustration for <em>Alice's Adventures in Wonderland</em> by John Tenniel, 1865 I <em>Alice: Curiouser and Curiouser </em>Courtesy Victoria and Albert Museum
The World of Alice at the Victoria and Albert Museum
티켓: £ 20
이메일:
위치: Victoria and Albert Museum
주소: Cromwell Rd, Knightsbridge, London SW7 2RL
Raise your hand, anybody who has never wandered off with Alice down the paths of Wonderland! Fans of the novel by Lewis Carroll are in good company - from Salvador Dalì to Yayoi Kusama, many artists have been charmed by the fantastical adventures of the little dreamer. We’ll surely get to know all of them better at the Victoria and Albert Museum in an exhibition which promises to be scintillating. And just like the story of Alice, this exhibition in London is a lengthy voyage full of surprises - from the origins of the novel in Queen Victoria’s England, right up to today, to see the impact that this incredible modern fable has had on art and global culture. Theatrical scenery, large-scale projections, hidden doors and immersive environments accompany the public in discovering 300 objects tied to the curious world of Alice. Through the rabbit hole, re-built in the underground Sainsbury Gallery, visitors will encounter The Beatles and the surrealists, the photography of Tim Walker and Annie Leibovitz, the psychedelic Sixties and the colourful vi-sions of Yayoi Kusama, as well as the original manuscript of Lewis Carroll, the unforgettable illu-strations of John Tenniel, Ralph Steadman and Disney, but also the costumes of the most beautiful dance pieces, films and theatre works based on the story. And finally, an installation commissioned by the museum invites us to go further, diving into the second part of Carroll’s novel, Through the Looking Glass.
At London’s V&A, the exhibition Schiaparelli: Fashion Becomes Art celebrates the visionary genius of Elsa Schiaparelli, pioneer of the dialogue between fashion and surrealism. From her iconic designs with Dalí to Daniel Roseberry’s sculptural creations, a journey through the boundless imagination of the century.
Ichiko Aoba brings her ethereal music to London’s Royal Albert Hall. With her new album Luminescent Creatures, the Japanese singer-songwriter turns the stage into a dreamlike landscape where silences and melodies unfold as inner journeys.
At the Royal Academy, The Histories presents the most comprehensive European survey of Kerry James Marshall’s work. Over seventy pieces place Black figures at the center of the artistic narrative, redefining Western painting’s traditional canons with bold, poetic force.
At the National Gallery in London, a remarkable exhibition brings back into focus one of the most enigmatic figures of eighteenth-century British painting, George Stubbs, exploring his quiet revolution in the depiction of the horse, an animal that, for the artist, became far more than a symbol of status or aristocratic refinement.